Plants of the order Ranunculales, especially members of the species Papaver, accumulate a large variety of benzylisoquinoline alkaloids with about 2500 structures, but only the opium poppy (Papaver somniferum) and Papaver setigerum are able to produce the analgesic and narcotic morphine and the antitussive codeine. In this study, we investigated the molecular basis for this exceptional biosynthetic capability by comparison of alkaloid profiles with gene expression profiles between 16 different Papaver species. Out of 2000 expressed sequence tags obtained from P. somniferum, 69 show increased expression in morphinan alkaloid-containing species. One of these cDNAs, exhibiting an expression pattern very similar to previously isolated cDNAs coding for enzymes in benzylisoquinoline biosynthesis, showed the highest amino acid identity to reductases in menthol biosynthesis. After overexpression, the protein encoded by this cDNA reduced the keto group of salutaridine yielding salutaridinol, an intermediate in morphine biosynthesis. The stereoisomer 7-epi-salutaridinol was not formed. Based on its similarities to a previously purified protein from P. somniferum with respect to the high substrate specificity, molecular mass and kinetic data, the recombinant protein was identified as salutaridine reductase (SalR; EC 1.1.1.248). Unlike codeinone reductase, an enzyme acting later in the pathway that catalyses the reduction of a keto group and which belongs to the family of the aldo-keto reductases, the cDNA identified in this study as SalR belongs to the family of short chain dehydrogenases/reductases and is related to reductases in monoterpene metabolism.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-313X.2006.02860.x | DOI Listing |
Ecol Evol
January 2025
Dynamic Macroecology/Land Change Science Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL Birmensdorf Switzerland.
High-Arctic environments are facing an elevated pace of warming and increasing human activities, making them more susceptible to the introduction and spread of alien species. We investigated the role of human disturbance in facilitating the spread of a native plant () in a high-Arctic natural environment close to Isfjord Radio station and along adjacent hiking trails at Kapp Linné, Svalbard. We reconstructed the spatial pattern of the arrival and spread of at Kapp Linné by combining historical records of the species occurrence (1928-2018) with a contemporary survey of the plant abundance along the main hiking trail (2023 survey) and tested the relative effects of altitude and proximity to hiking trails on the species density via a generalised linear model (GLM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Bot
January 2025
UCD School of Biology and Environmental Science and Earth Institute, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin, Ireland.
Plants (Basel)
December 2024
Department of Pharmaceutical Biology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Ljubljana, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Supercritical fluid extraction using carbon dioxide (SFE-CO) brings a convincing advance in the production of plant oils used in cosmetics, in fortified foods and dietary supplements, and in pharmaceuticals and medicine. The SFE-CO-extracted, hexane-extracted, and cold-pressed plant oils of pumpkin ( L.), flax ( L.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytoKeys
October 2024
Arctic University Museum of Norway, UiT The Arctic University, PO Box 6050 Langnes, NO-9037 Tromsø, Norway UiT The Arctic University Tromsø Norway.
Papaveraceae tribus Papavereae includes an American and a mainly Eurasian group of genera. The latter is proposed here to include eight genera. Amongst these, the recently described genus is phylogenetically a sister group to , a genus from Himalaya and central China, which is reviewed here as including 95 species and 21 subspecies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Biol
October 2024
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
The evolution of morphinan alkaloid biosynthesis in plants of the genus Papaver includes permutation of several processes including gene duplication, fusion, neofunctionalization, and deletion resulting in the present chemotaxonomy. A critical gene fusion event resulting in the key bifunctional enzyme reticuline epimerase (REPI), which catalyzes the stereochemical inversion of (S)-reticuline, was suggested to precede neofunctionalization of downstream enzymes leading to morphine biosynthesis in opium poppy (Papaver somniferum). The ancestrally related aldo-keto reductases 1,2-dehydroreticuline reductase (DRR), which occurs in some species as a component of REPI, and codeinone reductase (COR) catalyze the second and penultimate steps, respectively, in the pathway converting (S)-reticuline to morphine.
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